Installing a heat strip can be done on several model air conditioners and heat pumps. However I would not recommend the $75 heat strip. They are to expensive, probably require you to hire someone to install it at $100 per hour shop labor, it might be really expensive..
You are much better off with a small Wal Mart electric heater with a small fan in it. Portable, you can heat just the bathroom if you are taking a shower or something, and not needing the whole RV warmed up to 75F. Only about $18 - $25. Listen to the fan before buying. If it is not something that you can run while sleeping, it is way to noisy. Make sure it has a thermostat for automatic operation.
Listen carefully to your A/C fan. Is it noisy? I don't like how noisy mine is. I would much rather use a quiet fan.
Don't pay any attention to claims "This electric heater is more efficient than that model." All electric heaters 'can' put out 3,400 Btu's per KW input heat. Some are slightly less efficient, by using a fan to blow around the heat, and might use 10 extra watts to run the fan, not heating the air. Less than 1% of the energy will be used by the fan, and even the fan motor is putting off heat into the air. . .
So the "Amish" heaters that claim to produce heat more efficiently are probably comparing them to say a oil boiler system, where each $4 gallon of fuel oil only provides about 75,000 Btu's of heat into the home. The remainder is lost to heating the boiler, flue gas, excess air lost due to cold air being brought into the area of the heater and sent out the flue stack, and loss through heat exchangers.
You can make 80,000 Btu's with a typical RV furnace by burning 1 gallon of propane (95,000 Btu's) and some is lost to the heat exchanger and flue gas. Or you can run a electric heater and consume about 22 KW, at a typical cost from $2.20 to $3 per 80,000 Btu's of heat. Or run a heat pump and consume as little as 7 KW, while using less than $0.80 in electric. Heat pumps are by far the most efficient way to heat your RV, if the outside air temp is above 40F. Below 40F, most heat pumps revert to the gas furnace.
Good luck!
Fred.
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Porsche or Country Coach!
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